2013-01-01
2013-01-31
STATION
CSPAN2 14
LINKTV 9
CNNW 8
CSPAN 8
CNBC 6
CNN 4
SFGTV 4
SFGTV2 3
WRC 3
KGO (ABC) 2
KPIX (CBS) 2
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English 100

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office. a judge today convicted john lee poland of two misdemeanors, including misconduct in office for ordering two county employees to help with his catheter bag. the judge called it outrageous and arrogant. leo poland says he is humbled by the verdict. the judge is expected to announce a sentencing date for thursday. >>> an inspiring milestone for a u.s. army veteran who had a double arm trance plant. branden will work six hours a day in rehab to regain use of his new arms and hands. the 26-year-old new yorker lost all four limbs in an explosion in iraq in 2009. back in december, a big team of surgeons at johns hopkins hospital attached his new arms. six weeks out from the surgery, brenden wheeled himself in to a room full of reporters. >> i feel like i'm getting a second chance to start over after i got hurt. so i'm excited. excited for the future and where i can go with it. >> he has big plans. he wants to drive a car again and eventually complete a marathon using an arm bike. quite an inspiration, that young man. >>> so wow! what a wild ride this week. >> it has been a wild ri

of areas that we failed up poland were still fairly limited. there was a long story by in of the new york times about how levels cause anxiety. each is written about the cleese the exposed areas and will be the most exposed to help and. the story is about high levels of anxiety and pessimism. i am not that is not correct, i am responding that is not correct with the attitude of most of the country and as it can be determined. just to end on what we are looking forward two, clearly there are two transitions coming up it. the transition from cars i led the government to somebody else. the two, the latter is the more dangerous, the more difficult, and more uncertain. i did nothing the afghan army as corn to run a way i in 2014, but it is positive that it will result of in a failed transition. i do not mean the election will be a regular, necessarily. a think a regular election can produce and unstable result. it is 8 two round system. you will have 25 candidates that until the first round and will be more than 10% of the vote. did you will have second round, none of which will have more than

union and poland. in moscow, dick confronted nikita khrushchev in an exhibition of american consumer goods. pat once again had her own agenda of visiting orphanages and hospitals. he might have gotten more headlines, but pat's interaction with soviet women and children also made a lasting impression. she actually, there were all kinds of pictures offer happening out candy and bubble gum to the soviet children that made it into "life" magazine. perhaps more importantly, her pointed questions to nikita khrushchev about his wife's absence from the festivities led to mrs. khrushchev as well as the wives of other soviet officials suddenly appearing at the events during the rest of the visit. she told one reporter that she thought it helped to have a woman along on a dip romatic mission. they can -- diplomatic mission. she was overwhelmed by the outpouring of cheers that greeted the nixons as they traveled through the streets of poland. pat, who was not easily rattled, had to fight back tears according to one news account of their arrival in poland. when pat became first lady almost ten ye

, a lot out of poland, qatar airways, and united in the u.s.. it is united costly being addressed -- affected by this. freundel an's perspective, there are 800 aircraft on order of this -- from a bowling's perspective, there are 800 aircraft on order. we saw this reflected in the share price, down almost 4% today. >> wheat to the faa has said it will work with boeing to develop a corrective action plan to resume operations as quickly and safely as possible. safety really been the key word here. >> the key word as always -- they do not want these planes to be falling out of the sky or how fires on the runway. the federal administration is pledging to work with boeing and in the united states with united airways, the the operator of the planes at the moment, to work at what is going on, in particular with these lithium batteries to see whether there is a flaw or a serious fire risk spreading through the rest of the aircraft. what is not clear is what happens to the 787's operated by all the airline that does listed that are operating outside of the united states. the faa has no auth

regulators followed suit. the 787 had been about to leave chicago to return to poland. >> confirming that they have cancelled the inaugural departure from chicago to warsaw. the plane has just arrived safely, landed just now about five minutes ago. the reason for the cancellation is that both boeing and the faa had issued a recommendation to our board in warsaw to cancel the flight. >> passengers were booked on to other flights. most were unfazed. >> my husband was flying, and i really do not want to take any risk. i would rather have him fly either tomorrow or take some flight tonight by different airplane lines. >> officials have reacted swiftly to the latest incidents. wednesday, a dreamliner made an emergency landing in japan because of issues with its batteries. the grounding could prove disastrous for boeing, which has its future writing on the aircraft. the investigation could take weeks. >> for more on the business fallout of all of this, let's go to frankfurt. whenever we talk about blowing, you also have to talk about its sworn enemy. will lead to be licking its lips -- wil

. the 787 had been about to leave chicago to return to poland. >> confirming that they have cancelled the inaugural departure from chicago to warsaw. the plane has just arrived safely, landed just now about five minutes ago. the reason for the cancellation is that both boeing and the faa had issued a recommendation to our board in warsaw to cancel the flight. >> passengers were booked on to other flights. most were unfazed. >> my husband was flying, and i really do not want to take any risk. i would rather have him fly either tomorrow or take some flight tonight by different airplane lines. >> officials have reacted swiftly to the latest incidents. wednesday, a dreamliner made an emergency landing in japan because of issues with its batteries. the grounding could prove disastrous for boeing, which has its future writing on the aircraft. the investigation could take weeks. >> for more on the business fallout of all of this, let's go to frankfurt. whenever we talk about blowing, you also have to talk about its sworn enemy. will lead to be licking its lips -- will it be in jeopardy licki

and less. germany is not poland said my father. there are no contacts in berlin. >> he's a crazy man when i hear him on the radio. i can barely understand the german he's speaking he's an austrian, no, but his accent is fake. the geshel speaks perfectly. he must be the envy of singers every where. my father reached across his dinner plate and laid a hand on hers. she snatched it away. you know nothing. now you have butter on your sleeve. we neither mentioned our absent guest nor the chair awaiting her except on one occasion. father reported [inaudible] called a certain gog an a good deal. princess never spoke of money and bought paintings without inquiring about the price she left those details to her lawyer. snobby old cow is hamy father called her. i felt sorry for rose with father it was easy to make a mistake and not know it. you could sense it but not identify the crime much the second week of rose's apprenticeship the empty fourth chair disappeared. thank god you stop wearing that wretch ed clone. all my food tasted like must have beening. pity the polls they lost you. my mother sai

for the best part of the week. now we'll see snow moving right across northern germany, poland, and coming up toward the baltic states, staying mostly clear, precipitation, central locations, you will be dealing with that cooldown. out toward the east. more heavy snow for eastern turkey, although western locations looking drier now. minus 8 kiev. minus 9 in moscow. meanwhile, 7 in berlin. freezing point by the weekend. here is your extended forecast. ♪ ♪ >>> a male lesser panda has been matched with a new female friend ahead of the mating season for the mammals. the 6-year-old ken-ken arrived on wednesday in yokahama city, he's on lease from the zoo in the western prefecture of yamaguchi. handlers are hoping to help lesser panda's breed through crossover matchmaking in zoos. they've son far succeeded in breeding ken-ken three times. he's expected to mate with 12-year-old kinta, who's failed to produce offspring with her 10-year-old mate. mi. >> kinta is reaching the limit, so hopefully she can breed successfully this year. >> the mating period is january through march. >>> we'll be back i

's go over to europe. wet and windy across poland and the baltic space. we'll show you the figures in just a moment. conditions will get deteriorating across central europe. there's a new system coming in from the north. temperatures are quite warm. 12 degrees in paris and 11 degrees in london. here is the extended forecast. >> that's all for this edition of "newsline." thanks t thanks for joining us.

air in behind it. we are likely to see snow developing across parts of poland, into northern parts of germany. further south, colder air across more southeastern parts of europe, giving outbreaks of very light snow. we also have snow across parts of france in toward the alpine area. the u.k. enjoying drier weather. not particular warm, temperatures only seven degrees and londonderry but across siberia, dry and fine, a high of 10 degrees. moving into northern parts of africa, quiet weather conditions expected. in little coal on the coast of algeria. -- a little cool. germany still quite cold, just 16 degrees expected in cairo. central parts of africa, affecting southern parts of the democratic republic of condo. southern parts of africa heavy rain across angola extending across zimbabwe and in toward mozambique heavy downpours. but it looks fine from madagascar, highs of 25. >> top stories on al jazeera. a co-founder of the kurdish separatist movement pkk found dead of gunshot wounds in paris. killed inside the kurdish institute. a sri lanka in maid was beheaded in saudi arabia afte

. the russian was in third. the women's race -- poland proved unstoppable on the steep slopes. she romped home to win her fourth victory in a row. she continued her domination of the sport in recent years. behind her were two norwegians. >> russians are dominating the biathlon event in germany. there was flawless shooting in the 12.5 meter pursuit. his compatriot won the women's 10 kilometer. there were 10 shooting errors and she made it -- fell to 10th place. most of germany's football camps have headed to football camps in warmer climes. they hope to regain the bundesliga title for the first time since 2010. >> bayern munich are regulars here. it is the third time they have used the world's richest country as their training camp. it is a high-tech soccer oasis in the heart of the burning desert. >> i have been to a lot of training camps. i can honestly say the overall conditions here make this the best i have ever seen. >> the five star hotel is tucked away the lush training facilities. this is where the coach and the team kick back after a long day of training. even though they are top of t

, planning department staff to present the proposed designation for sam jordan's bar as an individual poland lark under article 10 of the planning code. at the request of the land owner the project was added to the land mark work program in 2011. at both the june and july hearing the historic commission voted unanimously in favor of the building based on its historical significance. to summarize, the build is significant for its association with the life of a person significant in our past. it is a physical location and geographic locus of the life work of sam jordan. jordan was a prominent business, political, social and cultural leader in the bayview neighborhood through the middle decades of the 20th century. sam jordan's support of african american entrepreneurship, civil rights and political involvement began before 1958 when he took ownership of the bar and remained constant until his death in 2003. his influence extended far beyond the neighborhood to include the larger sphere of san francisco. in 1963, jordan became the first african american to campaign for mayor of san francis

questions and provides answers. poland-based ivona's technology already supports features on amazon's kindle fire. still to come, outrageous new fees banks have come up with, and what it could mean for bank stocks. that's later in traders unplugged. but first, a problem not seen in the luxury home market for years is back. that's next. i wanted to be in the military since i was a kid. i served a total of 16 years. and at 19 years old, that's the first time i ever saw somebody die. coming back, i was raging. i started having pretty horrible nightmares. i started drinking a lot. i guess i never recognized it in myself. it all starts with going to the va. there's a whole community of veterans that just want to help you out. it's for the guys who couldn't come back, you owe it to them to live well. because they're not here with their families. americans suffer with a deadly disease. i was one of them. my disease was obesity and after consulting with my doctor, i received the effective treatment i needed. please join the obesity action coalition to acknowledge obesity as a disease visit obesity a

on the ground capability of america. the worst thing he did was do away with the interceptor in poland. i was part of that program. we discovered in 2007 that iran would have the capability of sending over a delivery system. we saw all of our innovators were on the west coast. the president has cut that number down to 30. and knowing that you have the capability by 2015, that is the most serious thing he has done to our security. that was all in the first budget. now we're looking at the $487 billion projecting out what he has put in place. if we end up a sequestration it will double that. i agree with the secretary of defense and with all the service chiefs when they look at what is happening to obama's defense. it is devastating to our military. we have the problems that are out there. we will have to face it. he articulated the problems we have that are not being addressed because of what happened to our military. >> should we may be addressing this and whether or not we are doing things and a more intelligent fashion? are there ways we can move our resources more efficiently if the re

. it was a vicious circle. it took a worldwide explosion to break it. in 1939, german armies marched into poland, igniting world war ii. the united states vowed to stay out, but the allies needed our economic resources. what were these resources and how would we mobilize them? robert nathan was on the war production board. as early as the fall of 1940, at the advisory commission, we began to come up with bottlenecks under a total mobilization of the economy, a fully-employed economy. it was clear we needed more aluminum and would need more steel. i remember when these results came out. we told the steel industry that a fully-mobilized united states would need more steel. they said, "you're crazy! "we've gone through a decade with phenomenal portions of our steel capacity idle." during the depression, the american steel industry limped along at 20% of its capacity. by 1941, the mills were working overtime, pouring out steel for tanks, guns, and planes. we would need new steel mills, open new factories, create new jobs. the american economy had gone to war. the japanese attack on pearl harbor brou

, 1945. today exhibition remembering the russian inmates opened up at the former camp in poland. survivors of the camp took part in a memorial ceremony. >>> pope benedict marked the day of remembrance by releasing two white doves, a symbol of peace. he told the crowd the memory should be a reminder there should be no reputation of the horrors of the past. >>> new weapon system undergoes a test in southern california. >> a rock egg caring a an interruptor or gbi. it is designed to collide midair with the war ahead. there was no tornado warning net this test but they were able to practice maneuvering it. it is the first test since the first mission failed two years ago. >> packing their bags for the super bowl as they load their luggage for the flight to new orleans. we wondered about good luck charms tucked inside. what some bay area fans told us they would take. >>> we want to share a few more photos with you. the mail box is filled with fans of every age showing off their team spirit. we will try to show you as many as we can leading up to

. the about us driver, 66-year-old charles poland jr. blocked his way, refusing to let any children go. then the gunman shot poland several times, killing him. officer arrived, and said after opening fire, the suspect grabbed ethan, who had fainted, and took him to his property. neighbors described him as a loner, survivalist and antigovernment. >> he believed that government is here only to take all of our things and suppress our rights, and that, you know, government is the great satan. >> reporter: he had been scheduled to appear in court wednesday to face a charge of menacing some neighbors with a gun as they drove by his house. at candlelight vigils, prayer for ethan and the bus driver, who across the community is being hailed for his bravery. >> my gratitude goes out to him for protecting the children. he started the day as a school bug driver, and he ended as a hero. >> reporter: mourning a loss, now the wait is on for the standoff's end. >> that same pipe that police used to give the boy his medicine is also being used to communicate with the abductor. >>> let's check out stori

is it going to take to actually move forward? what is it going to take, for example, to get france and poland to see consumers and moving once again? >> well, i think there are some differences country by country. france, it's a specific issue which is the tax regime needs to be clear. i think the underlying fundamentals for french companies is not that bad. in poland and the uk, i think you have more of a consumer waiting to lead, but sometimes will get better. i think lending finance plus infrastructure measures are the two that government needs to take. what more could we do to get the consumer back in a more positive frame of mind? >> you raise a very good point. george osborne and david cameron is both flying in today to davos. we hope to speak to them. we're going to get a negative picture of gdp tomorrow. that will put even more pressure on the chancellor. what does he need to do even more of? >> one of the things is to deliver some of the things that have been announced, for example, the lending scheme. maybe there are some things now that we should put the button on really just to st

said the soviets have a much better understanding of their own security, especially around poland and we do. >> if i could just interrupt. back to the details, do you think it was realistic for these two powerful nation, continental powers, each of whom had i think it's fair to say an empire, one in formal, one of the more informal or if the soviets had all these different states in the control and going to keep control of the baltic states and, of course, moving into eastern europe, was it realistic for these two powers with very different bases to really get along quite or were they really destined to have a cold war, and likely, never really a hot war? so these details are important but who knows of course where it would happen. but arguably, and stalin as you know himself, one of the heads of the french communist party told the american communist in april of 45, get ready for the wars. in effect, don't believe that the distance will last but at the same time as roosevelt was dying. if you want to comment? >> well, you're asking census of the questions about the french communis

poland, stays here. god. shut up, damn dogs. be quiet! hate those dogs. that wasn't in the crime scene photos. maybe a cable line. too big. and too high up. what happened to theookshelf that was against this wall, tammy? oh. my place. oh, yeah? yeah. i keep it for rosie. so what? ever see any bruises on toya? bruises? no, no, no. rosie never toh that girl. never. never. uh-uh. maybe one of her boyfriends did. says here you saw someone running from the building that night. yeah. black. he run and run and run. maybe he was her boyfriend. right. when pigs fly. rosie got a problem with black men? no, i got a problem. my building, my rules. okay? men at rosie's that night? yes. black in my building? no. men at rosie's? what night? the night toya falls. i hear men voices. the night she died? yeah. in and out, climb up, down the stairs. you didn't mention that two years ago. i see black run. i told about black. black did it. you see men come up in this place a lot, tammy? no. but one bedroom apartment-- come on. toya sleeps on the couch. i think. wait. rosie made her kid sleep in the living r

said bookings are solid. amazon.com says it acquired a company in poland that makes speech recognition software. >> san francisco officials are bringing back a year old program to help businesses in china town. starting this saturday, san francisco will prohibit curbside parking along five blocks of stockston street so businesses in that corridor can set up outdoor displays during weeks leading up to lunar new year to ensure safety of a large crowd of shopper that's they're expecting. >> we want pedestrians to stay within the stalk sidewalks. we'll have it care bided-sh barricaded off. >> merchants will have to get special permits and parking will be off limits between 9:00 in the morning and 7:00 at night. >> there is more still to come here tonight. just ahead, michael finney looks into whether some homeowners may have been misled about energy upgrades to home autos and mani teo about the girlfriend hoax he fell for. turns out he wasn't talking to a woman. >> another bay area resident with divided loyalty ofrtz super bowl. we'll hear from joe flako's brothe so if you have a flat tire

driver, charles poland, was shot and killed trying to protect them. >> we're just hoping for that day that we can bring the little boy home. safely to his family. >> reporter: the motive for the kidnapping is not yet clear. and aside from saying that the suspect is, quote, sleeping some, authorities are releasing very few details about this, in hopes that it all ends peacefully. diane? >> thank you so much, gio. i know you'll stay on this story. >>> and last night, we told you about a young woman in chicago. her death moved to the center of the debate about gun violence in america. hadiya pendleton, 15 years old, a majorette in her high school band, gunned down in chicago, days after taking part in the inauguration festivities. well today, a new image of the young woman emerged. and a mayor says she's taking action. abc's alex perez was there. >> reporter: it's been more than a decade since chicago has had a january this bloody. 42 murders so far this month, including 15-year-old hadiya pendleton, that standout student who performed at the president's inauguration festivities. today,

to remind you here that poland is grounding its 787s on the recommendations and says the delivery will depend on safety. although it expects more delivery so far right on schedule. it's a different story in south korea where there are no dreamliners in service yet. be korean air is standing by its decision to order upgraded 787s. chery kang is in seoul and joins us with the issues there now. chery, some concern although it sounds like they're still pressing forward. >> exactly. korean air is the only 787 customer here in korea. its shares were under water today, somehow reacting to that development. the airliner felt the need to explain, though, the difference between the dream liner boeing 787h model that was grounded yesterday and the model that it plans to adopt, which is a 7879. it is the official statement, korean air saying, the model is the upgraded version of the model this time. it adds by the year 2016 within korean air thinks that all the problems will be solved. it is adopting 10 aircraft of this model starting in 2016. guys, back to you. >> air india is the latest air

come with him. it's not clear why. the bus driver, 66-year-old charles poland junior refused to let any children go and when dykes shot poland multiple times killing him. as officers closed in, witnesses who shot this cell phone video say the suspect grabbed one of the children who had fainted and took the kindergartener to his property near by. the child has been identified simply by his first name, ethan. he turns 6 in a few weeks. in midland city, vigils wednesday night to pray for ethan and remember the bus driver. >> he's definitely a hero because he did everything he could to save those children. >> reporter: all of this shocking this small community in southeastern alabama. >> to think that he is holding this poor innocent little child, it just -- it is, it's inextricably overwhelming. >> reporter: court records show the suspect had a scheduled court appearance wednesday morning to face misdemeanor charges menacing a neighbor. police are not sure what role if any it may have played in a motive. savannah. >> thank you. alabama state representative steve clouse and state senator ha

in the classic film "the longest day." what they came to fight was made clear as we made our way to poland and there visited the nazi death camps. to stand in the very room where more than a million fellow human beings were mured in an attempt to annihilate the entire jewish population was sobering. to be able to sacrifice income to stop the holocaust and the insanity behind it would be a noble thing but we aren't being asked to sacrifice to mac our country stronger. we are being asked to pay more to make it weaker by making us a nation no longer focused on stopping evil and building real hope and faith for future generations, but simply spending money to give away for political paybacks and enriching the already privileged class at the very top anden slaving the dependent class at the very bottom. i'm inspired by once this country once did to stand for something. i'm just disgusted that we have now fallen for the lives and spinelessness of self-serving politicians. [applause] >> for my first guest is not one of those people about whom i have just spoken. he voted against the fiscal cliff

over from poland and live in brooklyn, new york, are just as much americans, people who came over from ireland, people who came over from italy, we're just as much americans. we live on the coast and we have a right to define the america we want to live in and we have the obligation to win politically, to vote for people to put gun control as a high priority. they put it as a number one priority. we who favor gun control put it as a 16th or 17th priority. so it's our fault, not the nra's fault. >> and the important thing of getting people like alex jones on the show is to hear him actually say that he believes president bush, the american administration under him, were responsible for 9/11, and that is why he wants americans armed, to defend themselves against that kind of murderous tyranny, and it's the most dangerous rhetoric i have heard in a very long time. >> it's very important he be exposed on your show because decent americans don't want to be associated with that kind of paranoid view of american history. they don't want to believe that our government is capable of engaging in

immediate children, you do not have to go back to ireland or poland or mexico to get the green card and apply for it, you can apply for it here and get the approval here, that way you just have to go back to your country of origin to pick it up instead of spending months there. and as we know, it's often a dangerous place to go. this will help a lot of people getting through this burdensom process. >> you took a major step, you moved to the judiciary committee, and said, we can't wait and wait and wait for immigration reform and i am finding an enthuz yam for action that i have not seen on capital hill for years. >> how do you better advocate for immigration reform from the judiciary committee? >> it's the committee of jurisdiction. i want to be there to work with my democrat and republican colleagues to make sure we foster a sense of unity and compromise and let's get it done. i want to make sure that i look people in the eye and say, look, i am not going to play politics, let's get it done. let's set the politics aside. tomb people, you know, greg every day, a thousand people get

everyone gets on their flights and poland's airlines say they may receive compensation from grounding of its two 787s and it's only going to take delivery of three more dream liners that had basically reserved and ordered if the technical issues had been resolved and you can bet your bottom dollar that there might be other airlines that say the same thing. >> mandy drury, thank you. we'll be right back. ? that's why there's boost® high protein nutritional drink. each delicious serving provides fifteen grams of protein to help maintain muscle and help meet expert recommended daily protein needs. plus it provides twenty-six essential vitamins and minerals and is gluten-free. help get the nutrition you need with a complete and balanced nutritional drink. try boost® high protein. also available in powder. this has been medifacts for boost®. plays a key role throughout our lives. one a day men's 50+ is a complete multivitamin designed for men's health concerns as we age. it has 7 antioxidants to support cell health. one a day men's 50+. stop! stop! stop! come back here! humans -- we are

to be flown sluice live by the 787. one was san jose to tokyo. the other, chicago to poland. so far many flights have been cancelled, leaving a lot of plans in limbo. >> i leave tomorrow or take some flight tonight by different airplane lines, then continue. >> the last time the faa grounded a plane was 199 of a tragic crash involving a dc-10. that turned out to be the fault of an airline maintenance crew. so we have to see about the boeing battery issue. >> that hurt mcdonnell douglas back then. >> like to give you a little good news. apparent good news, on the jobs front. the labor department reporting the number of americans filing for first time unemployment benefits fell last week, down by 37,000 to a total of 335,000. that the lowest level since right after the recession began five years ago. but the economists are warning the drop could be due to seasonal volatility because the numbers can actually vary from week to week in january, especially, as retailers and other companies lay off all the seasonal workers. >>> we still don't know exactly what has happened to all the american h

planes and can you see them all here. one of those carriers poland's lot airlines will go after boeing for the money it's losing in the process. official says it will not accept any more dream liners until the issue is resolved. in a statement last night, boeing's chairman and ceo wrote in part boeing is committed to supporting the f.a.a. and finding answers as quickly as possible. end quote. dan springer now with the news live in seattle not far from where teams assembled the dream liner, dan, this plane is loaded with a lot of new technology. is it not? >> it sure is, bill. it hasn't made a penny. but it's boeing showcase aircraft for sure. the 787 is the most technologically advanced and fuel efficient plane ever made. it's also supposed to provide the most comfort. it got there by using carbon composite instead of aluminum new electrical system one that generates twice as much power but weighs far less it also relies on lithium ion batteries certified by the faa but now being looked at because of these recent problems. airlines have had to cancel many flights as they scramble to fi

. and in my wife's case, they came from poland and ireland and in my case it came from places like switzerland and ireland. you can come here and learn to be be an american. but you to do that you have to learn to be an american. if you have a news media elite and entertainment only who oppose the teaching that, literally cut off lifeblood of this country. so that is the basis of what we have been doing. that is why we have an american legacy to it. several people said that if i come out here and talk about george washington, which a lot of people seems a long way off, both of the books became a "new york times" bestseller. it is actually about the 13 colonies. her mother broke her and said you should not say this is for four to eight years old. this is for four years old to 80 years old. nobody has said he the colonies, so it's brand-new information for everybody. and then she said, okay, but what you should really do in order to engage washington and the national media is applied to the fiscal cliff. i thought to myself, at the reagan library, what better place to go back to first principles

to talk to stalin, he said essentially, don't try to negotiate poland. not going to work. just back off. you're going to make more trouble for yourself getting embroiled in this whole issue. stalin is not going to do it. and of course he was right. so that's the story. >> in the pre-tv era, can you comment the public saw very little of roosevelt in a wheelchair. can you comment on what impact do you think that might've had on the hot kid was about projection to the american public at that time quite >> the fact that he was not shown in a wheelchair quiet you know, i don't know. all the newspaper people knew it and the public video that he was not all they are, but i don't know what effect that would've had. hatteberg seen them in a wheelchair? had everybody seemed hot consent is worse? i think yeah, if it ever seen hot is the way he looked a good hit of the time, they would instead get that guy out of here because he was a very, very sick man. roosevelt in the final month when he arrived at yalta, everyone commented that coming up, churchill said he is a slender contact with legs and ev

, yugoslavia, poland, plan for turning germany to cow pasture, the approval of slave labor as reparations to moscow, and the Ñ conference was a major factor, operation keelhaul which turn ñ two million anti-soviet refugees over to the soviets. those are examples and there ar others but those of the one that do know of in which perot soviet operatives within our government tilted policy in favor of communist interests. power points chambers makes over and over again in "witness" confirmed by everything i have  seen since which contributed to a very morrow's temperament and with good reason -- as john Ñ lewis gaddis pointed out these  revelations came not in the 40s 1939. the assistant secretary of çÑ state, nothing was done. in 1939, that was ignored at th time in the soviet atmosphere, no one wanted to hear such things. there was misrepresentation when the case surfaced almost a decade later. this made him extremely pessimistic and there's a kind  of pervasive sense of doom in ñ the final chapters of "witness" which was personal. a suicide attempt had been mentioned. for

to negotiate poland. it's not going to work. just back off, you know? you going to -- you're going to pick more trouble for yourself getting embroiled in this whole issue. stalin's not going to do it. and, of course, he was right. so that's the story. >> in the pre-tv era, can you comment? the public saw very little of roosevelt in a wheelchair. can you comment on what impact you think that might have had on the hopkins/roosevelt projection to the american public at that time? >> the fact that he was not shown in a wheelchair? you know, i don't know. yeah. all the newspaper people knew it. the public, you know, knew that he was, that he was not all there, but i don't know. i don't know what effect that would have had on -- had everybody seen him in a wheelchair, had everybody seen hop kips at his -- hopkins at his worst, i think they would have, yeah. had they ever seen 40 hopkins, how he looked a good deal of the time, they would have said get him out of here. because he was a very sick man. now, roosevelt in the final months, when he arrived at yalta, everyone commented that, you know, church

. ♪ >> you mentioned the freedom poland. do you remember it? >> what we did was this. as a boy, i was always upset in movies. the image of african people in hollywood prevalent. hart is putting it mildly. i was upset with african languages, what they would call african language. i wanted to put it and african language, the poem. i went to langston and the freedom poem -- which means freedom. >> with a great congo flows. it contained swahili. i went to the united nations and talk to a number of diplomats at that time. i said, how can i use one african language when there are so many languages in africa? how can i choose one? the general consensus was, you swahili. so i had this guy who was a scholar of swahili. he took langston's poem from english to keep swahili. his diction and voice was so wonderful. you can see him on the recording. >> africa where the great congo flows africa, where the whole jungle knows a new dawning breaks africa a young nation awaits, africa' >> [indiscernible] then when you got to be good aircraft, he had to make a contribution to society. >> i'm joined by the award

in 2013. >> the u.n. climate summit will be taking place in poland, and massive -- the country massively reliant on coal. australia is the world's largest exporter of coal, the most carbon in tins of fossil fuel. the guardian rights, australians for an average of slightly more carbon per capita than the citizens of the u.s. and more than twice as much as the people of the united kingdom. anna rose, talk about the state of the environmental movement. as you say, nothing will happen until the people push their so- called leaders, but has this massive catastrophic heat wave in australia, bringing you to temperatures to more than 122 degrees fahrenheit, how has it changed the movement? >> some parts of the media that are connecting the dots between extreme weather and climate change, and certainly as climate campaigners and people who try to help others understand what is happening to our planet with climate change, we have been trying to encourage the movement to have those conversations to be able to connect the dots. but of course we have other elements of the media who simply are not mak

have died since the conflect started in 2011 -- conflict started in 2011. >> in poland, an anniversary of the concentration camp. most were born in the camp or sent there as children. 6million jews, and hundreds of thousands of gypsies, homosexuals and prisoners were killed by the nazis. >>> officials are calling the death of a secret service dog a tragic accident. the dog fell last night as agents were doing security sweep of the building before an appearance by vice president joe biden. police rushed the dog to a hospital but the vellets were unable to revive him -- vets were unable to revive him. >>> boeing plans to double production on the boeing 787 dreamliners by the end of the year despite them grounding all 50 aircrafts in use. they have an order of 800 to fill for several different airlines. a stop in production would be costly. >>> all service from san jose airport to tokyo could resume tomorrow. they started using the boeing 787 dreamliners before the faa grounded the aircraft. since then they be put passengers on their flights to tokyo out of sfo. they haven't said what typ

between poland and russia," >> reporter: all she remembers is that they were sent to a labor camp she still has the camp layout her brother sketched for her so she wouldn't get lost. >> "it was very cold in siberia, and we were hungry. she says"i remember it was very cold, and we were swollen with hunger and frozen from the cold." >> reporter: so many details of the journeyhave faded from memory. leaving very few details of how her parents disappeared from their lives (voice foof translator) >> "i didn't understand that i was saying goodbye to my mother, i didn't think that was the end when she gave us up, put crosses on us, and left us in a christian orphanage" >> reporter: but some memories, from before the war, will never die. >> "i remember my mother's piano playing". >> reporter: ilana also has precious pieces of her family history that help her rememberher brother's drawing of the siberian camp and a hand written map he gave her detailing their path to safetyfrom siberia to uzbekistan, to india then iranand finally israel: >> "we were welcomed with oranges - they were like gold,

england or poland. they came here and overstayed. we have a bigger problem with those kinds of people representing threats than we have somebody coming up here trying to pick onions. rubio was absolutely right we need tough reforms so we can track people. we have an issue with family reunification. today the president indicated that he wanted to speed up family reunification, that sounds great but remember the family as we define it is not just songs and daughters, mothers and fathers, it's cousins and nieces and uncles andtives. as part of immigration reform we need to control that otherwise we're going to have a continuing problem of lots of people coming here without skills to succeed in the modern society. >> sean: karl rove. thanks for being here. >> thanks for having me. >> sean: a heated debated over the question of amnesty is the president's ultimate goal. then, later. .... >> i am not going to keep cutting the discretionary budget which, by the way, not out of control despite what you hear on fox news. >> sean: yet another democrat is taking her cues from eight niontd one and

work. >>> holocaust survivors are gathering in poland today to commemorate 68 years since the soviet liberation of the death camps. politicians and dignitaries joined survivors to pay their respects. groups laying down wreaths and flowers. many of the survivors attending were either born in the camp or sent there as children. between one and 1.5 million people died at the camps during world war ii. >>> coming up tonight, a new racy tourist ad showcasing d.c. and turning some heads. but is it a little too much? we're going to take a look. day. now you can do it with dinner. introducing land o'lakes® sauté express®. the all-in-one sauté starter with butter, olive oil, herbs and spices... so dinner really sizzles. it's one step, no prep. and so good, they'll ask for more. and that little victory is a pretty big deal. land o'lakes® sauté express. find it in the dairy aisle. >>> this week metro released a sweeping plan for the future of transit here in our region. among the most expensive items, new underground rail lines through downtown d.c. and georgetown. john henrehan has that

tell you to stories about poland. we were in poland eight years ago in september. i was going to visit to the supreme court in poland and when we go to the countries you we need to go to three supreme court often. it is a constitutional court, administrative court and the general distinction, so you go to three dinners and bring the three gifts. [laughter] but they are fine judges and fine courts and we were first teaching for few days and then we went to warsaw and i had arranged to meet with the faculty at the university of warsaw and the explained to me the students wouldn't be there. it was the third week in september i don't think they were coming into the first of october but they were going to be there and we did. midway through the meeting there were some notes being passed and they said we didn't realize our answering students are here for an orientation day and they would like you to talk to them. now, law in europe is undergraduates. very few countries in the world have a graduate law school. but engl

the dreamliner. this is out of poland making its inaugural flight of the 787. right now, as we speak, maria, in a couple hours. it will be touching down here in chicago. despite airlines saying we're still going to fly, it s & p capital iq downgrading shares of boeing on the concern, maria, that eventually we could see some airline customers saying, you know what, putting me on the dreamliner, i'm skipping that flight so that's the latest of what's happening with boeing. maria? >> want to bring in a couple other voices, michael boyd, aviation expert and on the telephone jim hall, former ntsb chairman, now managing director of hall & associates. good to see everybody. thanks for joining us. would you fly a dreamliner right now? mean, knowing what we know, jim hall, would you -- what would you job advice? >> oh, yes, i would fly the aircraft. i think if there are significant issues found that the regulators will take appropriate action. >> should the -- should united ground its 787s? >> no, no. >> you don't think so? >> i don't think so. >> michael boyd, what do you think is behind this? it s

in poland or when you think of the role playeded by the u.s. government to help smuggle out, and received a wide audience, and thinking of that, i think there are echoes here and lessons to learn for the present day of the ideological struggle we face today, and it's not a struggle against china, although they could be the greatest adversary in the long run, they do not have a transended ideology at the moment, but when you think about ideological struggle today, the obvious is against the forces of jihaddism extremism, and there is are lessons from "witness" on how to wage the day, and what should be known again as political warfare, and since he was invoked by the greatest explainer and student, i wanted to invox cannon from a 1948 memo he wrote on the organization of political warfare to define what i talk about when i say "political warfare." cannon said it's the employment of all means of a nation's command, short of war to achieve its national objectives. such actions are over and covert. they arrange from covert action of political alliances, economic measures -- obvious example th

and support solidarity, to undermine the communist regime in poland. or when you think about the role that was played by the u.s. government in helping to smuggle the gulags or capello out of russia and to see that it was published and received a wide audience but what i think of all that i think the articles here and lessons we should learn from the present-day for the ideological struggle we face today. and it's not an ideological struggle against china, even though china may well turn out to be a great adversary in the long run but china does not really have a transcendent audiology at the moment it is really fueled by nationalism and having discarded most of its communism ideology. but when we think the ideological struggle today the obvious one is against the forces of jihad is extremism. and i think that there are lessons here from the days of "witness" that we can learn in terms of how to wage today, what was then known and i think should be note again but as political warfare. and since george kennan was previously invoked by his greatest explainer and student, i thought i wou

in china, what happened in poland, the plan for germany in a cow past year, the slave labor as reparation and moscow approved at yalta. the yalta conference was a major factor. operation keelhaul was turned truly soviet wreckage is back over to the soviets. those are examples, and there are others, but those i do know of in which pro-soviet operatives within our government tilted policy in favor of the communist interest. our point that chambers makes over and over again in "witness" and is confirmed by everything else that we've seen since, which contributed to his, he had a very gross temperament. he was very pessimistic, and with good reason. he knew a lot and he couldn't get other people to believe it. he was a cassandra and, as professor gaddis pointed out, he made revelations about these problems but in the '40s but in 1939. assistant secretary of state, nothing was done. he named hiss van in 1939. that was ignored at the time to end the war the post-soviet atmosphere, no one wanted to hear such things. he then ran into greater efforts at concealment and misrepresentation when a cas

whether the party will win the income net? in poland, the fact won over the party. >> it is hard to predict when the breakthrough will happen. i'm hoping it'll happen in china. so many chinese intellectuals and scientists and economists are going back to china and there will be part of the vanguard that brings back the ideals that they have seen in other societies back to china. >> there was another question. the lady in the front row. that is a good question. if singapore is the exception to your view of the world. >> tiewan. >> growth is about changes and a response to changes in freedom. singapore had a remarkable positive change and economic freedom during the modern era when it opened up in a massive way to world trade. not so much on political. singapore has slowed down from the glory days by several percentage points over the last couple of decades. i think singapore will have to it politically liberalize. >> is in the slowdown partly because it has become richer? >> you could turn that around and say part of the reason autocracies grow fast is because there are poor. >> t

a concentration camp in poland. christopher mayor nel low is the executive director of the art loss register which tracks stolen artwork around the world. and we've elected to not show this painting because if it's true, it really does go beyond the pale here. it's nice to see you again. tell me, what's the story here? >> well, this artist claimed that he was creating something as sort of a memorial to holocaust victims but instead what he did was outrage most of the art world and most of the general public and offending jewish families all over the world. and the regional authorities in lublin, poland are looking into this matter to see if any criminal statutes were violated. we know that statute 262 of the polish criminal code penal code calls for up to eight years in prison for disturbing human remains. >> uh-huh. >> and this is something that they're looking into right now. >> how do you prove it? i mean, how would they try and prove that this is in fact what he did in. >> well, let's face it, if this is some sort of hoax or artistic provocation, the artist should be universally condemned. but

. the last one to fly into the united states was here into chicago. a lot of airlines out of poland. it landed shortly after 8:00. lot and other airlines are looking at replacing them with other aircraft. for some airlines not a problem, with others it will be an issue. this is really the one to watch. gsyuasa. gs yuasa is the firm that makes the lithium-ion batteries. yesterday the company said it may take them months to figure out why there was the emergency landing in japan earlier this weeks. if it's months before they an answer and a solution, then there's a real problem for boeing ahead. again, boeing looking for a solution, perhaps testing the batteries. that way showing, yeah, we know this one will not fail. phil, a quick, poland's lot has indicated it would seek compensation. is there any precedent for boeing to compensation carriers for a grounding? >> yes, not just boeing, but airbus. this happens all the time. if you are delayed in receiving your aircraft, you negotiate with the airport maker. okay, how much is it worth in terms of compensation there. so, yeah, this will

. that went to more notice when steven spielberg did the movie and i remember when tom was in poland and he telephoned me and he said, steven is really making a good film. and i was with simon & schuster until 1981 and went to houghton mifflin, and i learned a great deal at simon & schuster bed houghton. houghton was much more the kind of old-fashioned publishing that i've really felt at home with. and with me came on their own sedition market atwood, gary young's wood, ian mcewan, and it was wonderful that my authors just followed me. i was active for about six and half years and that was at the time they there were all of these takeovers. at random house, random was the first one to go public, and he was called into his office in he said now we are going to go public and there's going to be a stock government me tell you what's going to happen. i am not advising anyone. i'm just telling you what we are doing. and then rca bought us in then i went to simon & schuster and when i was at simon & schuster golf and western bought simon & schuster. at houghton, houghton was already a publicly h

and all the countries in central europe, poland, czech, slovakia have been strong markets for their automobile economy, you see those continue to go grow. at the same time, there's the banking sectors with leverage over real estate. there's a big gap between the banks see values and where the investors see model. in our business model, we're trying to support the deleveraging of the banks. but i think the markets in general are continuing to demonstrate slow, steady growth. and we think over the mid to long-term, it's compelling. >> in europe, it's very much dependent on what happens here. >> of course we're exposed to it. but the fundamentals are extreme to look at. if you look at the debt to gdp ratios, unemployment, eurozone employment at 11.7% or something and you look at central and asian europe, and is they're well below that. because they're a young market and a growing market, they're not facing the same problems and the same issues that western europe is. it's slow and steady, they're growing and developing. >> thanks so much for joining us, eric. earlier we asked

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